Sunday, November 22, 2009

Google Suggestions for "Doctors are..."

Google will auto-complete your search query based upon common things people type. This can be eye-opening. For example, here are the Google suggested searches for "Doctors are...":



Lest you believe this is a representative survey of how people feel about doctors, I present the Google suggested searches for "What are..." for comparison:

Saturday, November 21, 2009

"An antimicrobial tie with a graphic design based on the H1N1 virus." http://ping.fm/sTbMN

"Something Something Social Media: The Overdue Minority Report" by Merlin Mann (@hotdogsladies) http://bit.ly/7sKelo

Thursday, November 19, 2009

“Health gets personal in the cloud http://ping.fm/Ssbfn ” -@symtym

"Google just released a new research study on how physicians use the Internet. http://tr.im/FfNp ” -@skypen

Sunday, November 15, 2009

Adventures in Brain Tumors, by Matt Haughey (@mathowie). http://bit.ly/37DMa4

Saturday, November 14, 2009

Merlin Mann blogs about Marco Arment, both of whom I like. A lot. http://ping.fm/uDpHP

Thursday, November 12, 2009

Findings Doctors and Health Care Professionals on Twitter

My social Network on Flickr, Facebook, Twitter...Image by luc legay via Flickr

A little over a year ago, before Twitter was the tech/pop culture phenomenon it is today, doctors like myself had a problem: how do you identify other health professionals on Twitter? (At the time, there must have been at least dozens. Dozens.)

This was the first solution. In retrospect, it was hilariously cobbled-together:
This is a feed containing the conversations of all known doctors and medical students who use Twitter: http://feeds.feedburner.com/doctorsontwitter. (If that doesn't work, you can try the original feed from Yahoo Pipes instead.) Technical details, for those interested: I used this list of doctors/medical students on Kidney Notes, ran each person's Twitter feed through Yahoo Pipes, then burned a FeedBurner feed.
When FriendFeed debuted, I created "The Doctor's Room," which was populated by both Twitter feeds and RSS feeds of physicians. Unfortunately, the "room" feature was poorly designed by FriendFeed (which has since been acquired by Facebook). Like the Yahoo Pipes experiment, the FriendFeed room was an educational failure.

A month ago, Twitter finally debuted the "lists" feature, allowing each user to create subscribable lists of other users. Below is a sample. (For clarity, the second column is the number of users in the list, the third column is the number of users subscribed to the list. Got it?)



While not a perfect solution, lists are a simple way to discover health care practitioners on Twitter. (Finally.) Services like Listorious have also appeared which use the Twitter API to create searchable lists of lists.

For easy reference, here's a list of some of the more popular lists of doctors on Twitter:
(You can find me at twitter.com/JoshuaSchwimmer. The full lists of lists which include me is at twitter.com/JoshuaSchwimmer/lists/memberships.)

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

“Find locations near you for both the seasonal and H1N1 flu vaccine http://bit.ly/4nOr53" -@google

Saturday, November 7, 2009

Today's xkcd (my favorite webcomic): "Organ Donor." http://xkcd.com/659/